It responds to the OP claim that if harms are not ante-mortem then they are post-mortem. It shows that it's a false dichotomy and that there is a third possibility. — Cuthbert
It doesn't because it would just qualify as another antemortem harm and would not be sufficient to account for the harmfulness of death.
It isn't coherent anyway - but I am putting that aside. I'll just give you this third option. The fact is that the harms that would accrue to you at taht point are trivial compared to the harm death does to you.
You consistently seem to miss the point. It's not about where the harms of deprivation occur. It's about their sufficiency.
If you appeal to harms of deprivation, they're inadequate. This can be easily shown. Imagine someone who won't be deprived of those things and ask yourself if death would still harm that person. ANd it will.
Now, it is not to the point to keep arguing that those harms - the harms I keep demonstrating to be inadequate - occur at this point rather than that. That's irrelevant. The point is they're
insufficient
If death takes you to a much, much worse place - that'd do the trick. If you just keep appealing to harms of deprivation, then you're on a hiding to nothing, regardless of whether you locate their occurrence.
So, once more, it obviously harms a person to kill them, and it harms them even if it deprives them of nothing - hell, it harms them even if it benefits them by depriving them of some great suffering.
Now, if that's true, then you can't appeal to those harms of deprivation to account for death's harmfulness.
For an analogy: susan plans on going to the cinema. But she accidentally sets herself on fire and spends the evening writhing in agony in hospital. Now, the accident deprived her of a nice evening at the cinema. No question about that. But it would be manifestly absurd to suggest that 'that' is what the main harm of the incident consistent of, would it not?
Sandra planned on doing her accounts - a task she hates - but she too accidentally set herself on fire and spent the evening writhing in pain in hospital. Now, she was not deprived of anything worth having. But she suffered about the same harm as Susan, yes? That's because the main harm is the intense agony they suffered, not the harms of deprivation.
That's how things are with death too.